(Washington Post) U.S.-backed Iraqi forces face risky urban warfare in battle against ISIS

The Obama administration has touted the modest successes in recent months of Iraqi forces and paramilitary fighters, backed by U.S. air power, as they have fought to wrest towns, villages and parts of Iraq’s rugged countryside from the Islamic State.

Now, the renewed U.S. campaign in Iraq faces a greater challenge as American advisers scramble to prepare Iraqi forces for an offensive to reclaim some of Iraq’s most important cities, which remain under the militant group’s control.

Attempting to take back the city of Mosul, the country’s ­second-largest, as well as Tikrit and Fallujah, will test not only the fighting power of Iraqi forces and the country’s fragile sectarian compact but also President Obama’s indirect strategy for containing the Islamic State.

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One comment on “(Washington Post) U.S.-backed Iraqi forces face risky urban warfare in battle against ISIS

  1. BlueOntario says:

    Why don’t we ask what the Iranians want since the they’ve been calling the shots since 2005 or so.